Flaco Jiménez & Max Baca Perform Best Of The Conjunto Repertoire On New Smithsonian Folkways Album, | Shore Fire Media

Smithsonian Folkways RecordingsClient Information

13 January, 2014Print

Flaco Jiménez & Max Baca Perform Best Of The Conjunto Repertoire On New Smithsonian Folkways Album, Out 2/25/14

In the world of accordion-driven Texas-Mexican conjunto music, Leonardo “Flaco” Jiménez and Max Baca are at once pillars of the past and forgers of the future. 'Legends and Legacies' spotlights these GRAMMY award-winning artists, each an inheritor of a musical legacy from his father and grandfather, and each a dynamic force of musical genius.

For more than 60 years, Flaco has pioneered the three-row button accordion, earning five GRAMMYs along the way, and ever since Max, 28 years his junior, joined him on the bajo sexto guitar, the duo has cultivated a larger-than-life reputation both on and off the stage. On February 25, 2014, Smithsonian Folkways will release 'Flaco & Max: Legends & Legacies,' a new album featuring Flaco and Max's interpretations of the best of the conjunto repertoire.

“If you only just push one button and you push it with heart, that’s all you need—the heart, the alegría (joy).” — Leonardo “Flaco” Jiménez

Listen to selections from the album: http://goo.gl/6K7tWT

Watch Flaco and Max record “Me voy lejos (I’m Going Far Away)”: http://youtu.be/6OI9zxza56U

Watch the NPR "Tiny Desk Concert": http://n.pr/Uzt0OI

With accordion and the deep-pitched bajo sexto front-and-center, electric bass and drum kit supporting, and lyrics that are down-to-earth and often funny, conjunto ranges from fast-paced polkas (canción-polca) to slower, Mexican-style country songs (canción-ranchera). 'Flaco & Max' showcases the full breadth of the genre. Each an inheritor of a musical legacy from his father and grandfather, Flaco and Max chose the repertoire they consider most important to their respective musical paths for the album.

On the boisterous canción-polca "Cada Vez Que Cae La Tarde" — composed by Flaco's father, Santiago Jiménez, Sr. — Flaco and Max sing as a solid duo during the verses, and in between they trade zippy, virtuosic riffs. Other selections on the album were written by Flaco (“Fiesta alegre,” Joyful Fiesta) or were taught to Flaco and Max by their fathers ("Me voy lejos").

Born in 1939 into a line of pioneering Tejano accordionists, Flaco has won GRAMMYs for his own recordings and for albums with the Texas Tornados. He's also recorded with artists including The Rolling Stones, Dwight Yoakam and Ry Cooder.bkitching@shorefire.com

Max was 7 when he met Flaco at a concert; 20 years later, he became his bajo sexto player. Flaco brought Max into the Texas Tornados, whose combination of country, rock and conjunto has inspired Max's Los Texmaniacs. The band's 2009 Smithsonian Folkways album 'Borders y Bailes' won a GRAMMY, and its 2012 album 'Texas Towns & Tex-Mex Sounds' received a Latin GRAMMY nomination this year.

‘Flaco & Max: Legends and Legacies” is the 40th release in the Smithsonian Folkways Tradiciones/Traditions series since 2002. The series, a co-production with the Smithsonian Latino Center, showcases the diverse musical heritage of the 50 million Latinos living in the USA.

For tour dates, please visit http://texmaniacs.com

'Flaco & Max: Legends & Legacies' tracklist:
1. Margarita, Margarita
2. Cada vez que cae la tarde (Each Time the Afternoon Wanes)
3. El pesudo (The Man with Lots of Pesos)
4. Me voy lejos (I’m Going Far Away)
5. Borradita diente de oro (Bright-Eyed Golden-Tooth Girl)
6. La múcura (The Clay Jug)
7. Mi primer amor (My First Love)
8. El parrandero (The Man on a Spree)
9. Los amores de José (José’s Loves)
10. Brincando cercas (Jumping Fences)
11. Jardin de las flores (Garden of the Flowers)
12. La viejita (The Little Old Lady)
13. Beer-Drinking Polka
14. La nueva Zenaida (The New Zenaida)
15. Morena, morenita (Dark Woman, Little Dark Woman)
16. Ay te guacho cucaracho (See You Later, Alligator)
17. Fiesta alegre (Joyful Fiesta)

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Smithsonian Folkways Recordings retail distribution is through ADA (Alternative Distribution Alliance) at 800.239.3232. Smithsonian Folkways Recordings, as well as Folkways Records, A.R.C.E., Cook, Collector, Dyer-Bennet, Fast Folk, I.L.A.M., The Mickey Hart Collection, Monitor, M.O.R.E., and Paredon, are available via mail order at 888.FOLKWAYS or 800.410.9815 and via the Internet. Visit the Smithsonian Folkways Recordings website at www.folkways.si.edu.

U.S. print media inquiries: Matt Hanks (mhanks@shorefire.com), Chris Taillie (ctaillie@shorefire.com), Bryant Kitching (bkitching@shorefire.com) Shore Fire Media, (PH) 718.522.7171